The Invisible Border between Ius Commune and Common Law: Traditional Interpretations and New Prospects, in D. Freda, M. Piccinini, H. Pihlajamäki, C.M. Valsecchi (a cura di), Borders of the Early Modern Ius Commune. England, Venice and Scandinavia, Routledge, London & New York 2025

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Názov: The Invisible Border between Ius Commune and Common Law: Traditional Interpretations and New Prospects, in D. Freda, M. Piccinini, H. Pihlajamäki, C.M. Valsecchi (a cura di), Borders of the Early Modern Ius Commune. England, Venice and Scandinavia, Routledge, London & New York 2025
Autori: dolores freda
Informácie o vydavateľovi: Routledge, 2025.
Rok vydania: 2025
Predmety: Ius commune, common law, early modern period, Ius commune, common law, early modern period
Popis: The article challenges the historiographic cliché, tracing back to F.W. Maitland and handed down to us by the European legal tradition, of the existence of a dichotomy between common law and ius commune. Such an interpretation, taking the “Englishry” of English law for granted, contributed to build its history on its exceptionality with respect to Continental law. The article, focusing on points of connection and overlapping between common law and ius commune, highlights the existence of a common European legal tradition since the middle ages.
Druh dokumentu: Part of book or chapter of book
Jazyk: English
Prístupová URL adresa: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/1001786
Prístupové číslo: edsair.dedup.wf.002..10eb6c85f25982f03e8ce56450a8fc9c
Databáza: OpenAIRE
Popis
Abstrakt:The article challenges the historiographic cliché, tracing back to F.W. Maitland and handed down to us by the European legal tradition, of the existence of a dichotomy between common law and ius commune. Such an interpretation, taking the “Englishry” of English law for granted, contributed to build its history on its exceptionality with respect to Continental law. The article, focusing on points of connection and overlapping between common law and ius commune, highlights the existence of a common European legal tradition since the middle ages.